[21344] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Tired of Dieting? Get a 100% Organic Cambodian Weight Loss Extract!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Pure Garcinia Cambogia Extract)
Sun Nov 10 11:01:23 2013
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2013 08:01:20 -0800
From: "Pure Garcinia Cambogia Extract" <PureGarciniaCambogiaExtract@insetioflnr.us>
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100% Organic Weight Loss - Pure Garcinia Extract!
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Is there a "monster" living in Lough Foyle, Ireland.YouTube.com videoFor
lovers of the paranormal who've grown weary of waiting for the Loch
Ness monster to reappear, here's a new "monster" to feast your eyes
upon.Three college students were filming a short movie as a class project
at Lough Foyle, a large tidal estuary in County Donegal, Ireland, when
something very odd moved through the water in front of them, UPI
reports."Looks like we have our own Loch Ness monster!" Conall Melarkey,
a student at North West Regional College in Derry, Ireland, wrote in
his posting of the video clip to YouTube. [Loch Ness, Chupacabra &
More: Our 10 Favorite Monsters]"I have absolutely no idea what it is,
but it looked amazing!" Melarkey wrote.The shaky, 59-second video shows
a dark object of indeterminate size moving slowly along the surface of
Lough Foyle before diving or sinking slowly beneath the waves.Some observers
have speculated that the object could be a large fish, a whale,
a dolphin or some other marine animal (Lough Foyle is open to
the North Atlantic).Besides the infamous Loch Ness monster of Scotland,
reports of large, lake-dwelling creatures have come from other parts of
the world, including the mysterious "Devil of Lake Labynkyr" in Siberia.Nessie
achieved international fame when, in 1934, a now-famous photograph was published
showing a large animal with a serpentine head and neck. The photo,
taken by a London surgeon named Kenneth Wilso
The Homeland Security Department ordered border agents "effective immediately"
to verify that every international student who arrives in the U.S. has
a valid student visa, according to an internal memorandum obtained Friday
by The Associated Press. The new procedure is the government's first security
change directly related to the Boston bombings.The order from a senior official
at U.S. Customs and Border Protection, David J. Murphy, was circulated Thursday
and came one day after the Obama administration acknowledged that a student
from Kazakhstan accused of hiding evidence for one of the Boston bombing
suspects was allowed to return to the U.S. in January without a
valid student visa.The student visa for Azamat Tazhayakov had been terminated
when he arrived in New York on Jan. 20. But the border
agent in the airport did not have access to the information in
the Homeland Security Department's Student and Exchange Visitor Information
System, called SEVIS.Tazhayakov was a friend and classmate of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's
at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Tazhayakov left the U.S. in
December and returned Jan. 20. But in early January, his student-visa status
was terminated because he was academically dismissed from the university.Tazhayakov
and a second Kazakh student were arrested this week on federal charges
of obstruction of justice. They were accused of helping to get rid
of a backpack containing fireworks linked to Tsarnaev. A thi
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> An investigators carries a piece of debris amid the destroyed fertilizer
plant in West, Texas, Thursday, May 2, 2013. Investigators face a slew
of challenges in figuring out what caused the explosion at the fertilizer
plant that killed 14 people and destroyed part of the small Texas
town. (AP Photo/Pool/ LM Otero)The Associated PressWEST, Texas Burglars
occasionally sneaked into and around a Texas fertilizer plant in the years
before a massive, deadly explosion sometimes looking for a chemical
fertilizer stored at the plant that can be used to make methamphetamine,
according to local sheriff's records.Sheriff's deputies were called more
than 10 times to West Fertilizer in the 11 years before an
April 17 blast that killed 14 people, injured 200 and leveled part
of the tiny town of West, according to McLennan County sheriff's office
files released through an open-records request. Multiple calls involved
suspicion that anhydrous ammonia was being stolen.The records portray a
plant with no outer fence that was a sporadic target of intruders.
Law enforcement was occasionally called because someone had noticed the
smell of gas outside or signs of an intruder.Anhydrous ammonia is a
fertilizer that is a frequent target of burglars trying to manufacture methamphetamine.
In the right conditions it can be flammable or explosive, though that
is nearly impossible outdoors. However, a leak of the gas could create
a potentially fatal toxic chemical
Sept. 4, 2011: Shown here is the main plant facility at the
Navajo Generating Station, as seen from Lake Powell in Page, Ariz.APPresident
Obama, in each of his last three State of the Union addresses,
spoke urgently of the need to cut through the "red tape" in
Washington.But regulatory costs for the American public and business community,
it turns out, soared during his first term. A new report by
the conservative Heritage Foundation estimates that annual regulatory costs
increased during Obama's first four years by nearly $70 billion -- with
more regulations in store for term two."While historical records are incomplete,
that magnitude of regulation is likely unmatched by any administration in
the nation's history," the report said.The analysis by Heritage did not
count every single regulation issued in Obama's first term, but looked at
"major" regulations impacting the private sector. It came up with 131 over
the past four years -- many of them environmental. In addition to
the $70 billion in annual costs from those rules, the report estimated
that new regulations from the first term led to roughly $12 billion
in one-time "implementation costs."The math is up for debate. Even Heritage
acknowledges there is no "official accounting" for federal regulatory costs.
But government agencies, as well as think tanks like Heritage, have tried
to track the price tag by looking at records maintained by the
Government Accountability Office and age
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